Download Free Samkhyakarika Book in PDF and EPUB Free Download. You can read online Samkhyakarika and write the review.

The Samkhya Karika is one of the oldest known treatises on Samkhya, which is the source philosophy for the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali. This volume contains the original Sanskrit text with transliteration, Baba Hari Dass’ English translation and word by word definition. Baba Hari Dass’ thorough commentary on each verse is based firmly in classical yoga, yet written with the Western student in mind. Included are an introduction to set context and several charts and tables.
Samkhya is one of the most important six systems of Hindu philosophy. Its contribution to our knowledge of Reality and the world is crucial. Vedanta, one of the other six systems of Hindu philosophy, accepts most of the basic concepts of Samkhya. Not only Vedanta but also modern science, cannot be understood in all their nuances without first understanding the tenets of Samkhya. This English translation of Isvara Krsna’s Samkhya Karika with the gloss of Vacaspati Misra is by Swami Virupakshananda, who was a senior monk of the Ramakrishna Order and a prolific writer. The book comprises word for word meanings, a free translation and questions and answers.
Samkhya is known as one of the oldest systems of Indian Philosophy. Is varakrsna Samkhyakarika seems to be the earliest available and most popular work of this system. The present volume contains the original Sanskrit verses (Karikas) alongwith the Yuktidlpika commentary. The authorship of this comm. is not yet known. But it is known that the Yuktidlpika comm. is an oldest, authentic and clear exposition on Samkhyakarika. The speciality if this edition is that it contains the revised English Translation of S.S.S. Sastri. Besides these, transliteration of verses, explanatory notes and variant readings of the texts, are some other features of this work. In addition to these, this book is also furnished with several useful Indices. It is hoped that this edition will be more helpful to such students in understanding the meaning of its verses through an English translation and notes based on the Yuktidlpika commentary.
Spirituality without God is the first global survey of “godless” spirituality. Long before “spiritual but not religious” became the catchphrase of the day, there were religious and spiritual traditions in India, China, and the West that denied the existence of God. Peter Heehs begins by looking at godless traditions in the ancient world. Indian religions such as Jainism and Buddhism showed the way to liberation through individual effort. In China, Confucians and Daoists taught how to live in harmony with nature and society. Philosophies of the Greco-Roman world, such as Epicureanism, Stoicism, and Skepticism, focused on enhancing the quality of life rather than buying the favor of the gods through sacrifice or worship. Heehs shows how these traditions, rediscovered during the Renaissance, helped jump-start the European Enlightenment and opened the way to the atheism and agnosticism of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The personal, inner, approach to religion became known as "spirituality.” Spirituality without God is a counterbalance to theistic narratives that have dominated the field, as well as an introduction to modes of spiritual thought and practice that may appeal to people who have no interest in God.
The object of the series is to offer the general reader, authentic accounts of the life and work of the great personalities who have contributed in large measure to Indian culture and philosophy and influenced the mind and life of its people. The series includes about 125 such names-seers and philosophers, poets and dramatists, mystics and religious leaders, writers on science, aestheticians and composers. The books are intended for the average reader who is keen to learn more about Indian culture without going into finer academic details. Dr. V. Raghavan, well-known Sanskrit scholar and Indologist, is the General Editor of the series.
Samkhya and Yoga are two of the oldest and most influential systems of classical Indian philosophy. This book provides a thorough analysis of the systems in order to fully understand Indian philosophy. Placing particular emphasis on the metaphysical schema which underlies both concepts, the author adeptly develops a new interpretation of the standard views on Samkhya and Yoga. Drawing upon existing sources and using insights from both Eastern and Western philosophy and religious practice, this comprehensive interpretation is respectful to the underlying spiritual purpose of the Indian systems. It serves to illuminate the relation between the theoretical and practical dimensions of Samkhya and Yoga. The book fills a gap in current scholarship and will be of interest to those concerned with Indology as well as philosophies in general and their similarities and differences with other traditions.
Study with text and translation of Sāṅkhyāsūtra of Kapila, work on Sankhya philosophy.
For the spiritual aspirant, samkhya is the metaphysics of self-realization and yoga is the sadhana or means to achieve it.